Trust in Business | Joshua Konowe | TEDxTauranga - YouTube

Channel: TEDx Talks

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Translator: Mohamed M Yousif Reviewer: Ellen Maloney
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"The best way to find out if you can trust somebody is to trust someone."
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Ernest Hemingway said that.
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And we wouldnt be a great if you were starting a business,
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and right out of the gate you had instant trust?
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You know, you could go solve the great problem with your co-founders
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and not have to worry about trust.
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Ernest, you gave me a great opener,
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but it is not exactly easy in principle.
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I've started, founded, and funded four early-stage technology businesses
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over the last 15 years with varying degree of success
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and absolutely some failure.
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And one of the things that I've examined in doing so is a lot of this stemmed back
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from some earlier times.
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So I will start there.
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In 2001, September 11th,
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I was a little late going to work one morning,
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and didn't attend a breakfast meeting
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at a restaurant called "Windows on the World"
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in the North Tower.
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And within two hours, my livelihood,
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and sheltered view, and trust was wiped clean.
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And like a lot of other folks at the time, I was forced out of my job,
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and into starting my first company.
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As you can imagine,
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that first business taught me some incredibly valuable lessons.
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And also some super harsh ones.
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Lets put it this way: I used to have a lovely head of hair.
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(Laughter)
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And it also told me some things to look out for
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in those businesses in the beginning, and one of the them is mistrust.
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I have the luxury of not just looking
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at mistrust from the four businesses that I have started,
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but I am an adviser to some others, I sat on the board with a few more,
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and so all of the mistrust seems to happen
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or form within at first pivotal 12 to 18 months period.
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And it is usually for a lot of the same reasons and at the same moments,
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right at the formation and structure of those companies
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Why is there so much mistrust in the beginning?
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Well, we start by signing a stack of paperwork for legal protection
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meant for all parties involved.
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Starting a business literally starts with,
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"I don't trust you, even though I am shaking your hand."
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Or, "I trust you, but why don't we get the divorce out of the way first,
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then we can go back and build a business?"
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Or, "I don't trust you at all, you need to sign that paperwork."
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How is this action okay at any level?
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Here is terrifying statistic:
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62% of all businesses fail because of co-founder conflict.
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And it is usually for a lot of the same reasons;
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misappropriations of funds, one founder feels like they are doing more work
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or they want more equity, soon enough you have greed or somebody gets a job.
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I mean, greed we can talk about that one issue
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for an entire additional TED talk.
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And there is something more, there is something innate in all of us,
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something that's kept us alive for millions of years.
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And that's our architecture for self-preservation
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known as "fight or flight."
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Think about it: if you're starting a business and it's really hard,
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how much easier is it to just say, "You know what? Forget it."
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Or other people who tell you, and encourage the demons in your head,
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those voices that you hear, over and over again:
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"You know what? You're better off Josh."
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Yet we know that if we take time to process that data, and slow down,
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that we can come to a more cogent answer more frequently.
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Asking that question, asking that "Why?"
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"Why will people trust you?"
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Asking it over and over and over again is not an exercise in futility,
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it's what you should be doing every time, even when you're crushing it.
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Now, people were asked why they buy.
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And as you can imagine, starting a business,
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this is incredibly important.
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It's pretty important.
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And the reasons that people buy
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don't necessarily point to 100 year old brands.
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I mean, let me put it this way:
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I'm not taking anything away from the Coca-Cola's of the world.
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They absolutely have earned their right place.
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But 77% of the reason that people buy
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is because of family and friend recommendations: 77%.
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And that makes perfect sense.
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They're your family, they're your friends.
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If your dog could tell you what kind of dog food it wanted to buy,
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you'd probably go racing off to buy it because it's your dog.
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Anyway, all of this brings us back to a better place
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around why and how we should form businesses going forward.
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I'd like to propose something
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that I'm calling a "trust framework" and this is the reason or rationale -
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for people to begin businesses.
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And it has three core elements
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So the first one is transparency.
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Sadly, I've been part of businesses in the past
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where this has been completely absent.
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- I'm having the Ted moment where my earphone is coming off -
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And within transparency,
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you need to be able to have fiscal transparency as a starter.
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What I would mean by this is very simple:
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take the team to go out and raise the money together.
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If you don't want to have anything but a transparent moment,
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it would be great for the investors to see who else is involved in the company.
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Don't just try and go it alone.
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Another pillar in this is purpose.
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Now this sounds like an obvious one, and a purpose-driven company
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is one where everybody can get behind it.
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This is usually you solving a problem or a pain.
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Right? A pain or a pleasure.
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This is the best way to get people in behind what you're trying to do,
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and how you're trying to accomplish it.
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Now, you could start a business to just create wealth.
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But if you want to bring on greed,
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or that fight-or-flight that we talked about earlier,
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by all means do so.
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Your odds of success are going to go down
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Conversely, sometimes we also put altruism or purpose-driven businesses
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in the category of being for nonprofits only,
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and that's just not the case.
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The last one is execution, and I can't stress this enough:
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We all have ideas that go nowhere,
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and you need to execute on your plan.
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If you do not execute on your goals,
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nobody is going to trust that you can get from point A to point B.
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Execution is the measurable result
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of the planning that you've had in place to solve somebody's pain or problem.
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Another analogy is a sports one.
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So from the time that your All Blacks do the Haka,
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till the time that they leave the field,
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you want nothing more for them to execute on their goals and when.
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This is a note to everybody in the audience:
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anytime you're doing a really big speech,
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you always want to pull the appropriate sports reference
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for that local audience.
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(Laughter)
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Look no further than these guys.
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This is a company that has a trust framework in place,
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that's buffered by both altruism and purpose,
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and their market cap,
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in my opinion, is really just the tip of the iceberg.
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Here's another one.
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This company publishes what every single employee makes,
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how they're paid, and posts it on the web.
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This is a private venture backed company.
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They don't have to do this but they care about trust.
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Here are some other companies that we all use day in and day out.
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They have our credit cards, they have our location,
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they have our purchase history.
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One of them lets us stay at a home
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and another one in a car with a complete stranger.
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I don't know about you, but if my mom and dad find out I'm doing all this,
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they're going to be really disappointed.
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I can hear it now: "Joshua, didn't we teach you anything?"
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Let's go back to what Hemingway said about trusting someone
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as being the best way to trust them.
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I agree with that in principle but let's also do ourselves a favor
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and set up better businesses for all of the right reasons.
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Buffered by purpose, altruism, executable goals,
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and in a transparent framework
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Starting a company is literally a giant pile of risk.
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If what we claim to want to do is have a better world for everybody involved,
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then we've got to work from a framework.
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And if we do it, and not just say that we're going to do it,
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I think we'll make a little money while we're at it.
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Thank you
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(Applause)